Line Twist and the Parallel Universe
Posted: Tue Jun 02, 2020 8:03 am
Viking Lars was asking me about line twist yesterday. This can occur when Spey Casting, Belgian Casting, basically any change of plane cast. The theory is simple, draw the rod tip in continual circles and you will twist the line. It’s the opposite of pulling line off a spool sideways instead of by rotating the spool.
Why then does line twist not occur for Morsie, Chris Dore and Stuntman Ronan? Is it, as I first believed, because they all live in a parallel universe? Knowing these three as I do, I can confirm that they do indeed live in Parallel Universes but this alone does not explain their lack of line twist.
So I’ve looked into this a bit deeper and I think the problem is not simply the circular movement of the tip, but what you do with your line hand. The problem is the twists slipping from in front of the line hand, to behind the line hand where they stay. On the other (fly side) of the line hand they just untwist again through casting.
So the next question is why do Lars, myself and others get twist here while others don’t? I believe it’s because we twisters release tension, whole slipping line, allowing the twist to pass to the reel side of the fingers. When I talked to Ronan he said he rarely slips line on the backcast. I almost always slip a little bit of line to cushion the boing. In fact the only time I don’t slip at this point is on the final backcast in distance competitions - when I really have to stop myself from doing it subconsciously.
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Incidentally to remove line twist I find the easiest way is to shoot the line to the reel a few times, this helps puts the twist outside the tip ring where it can unravel.
Another little trick I have, is when spooling nylon - or flylines - is to do five turns right hand followed by five turns left hand and so on. Put twists in, put reverse twists in. I have been known to put entire flylines on spools this way - until I was taught to spin spools around a pencil/pen/screwdriver by Akos.
Cheers, Paul
Why then does line twist not occur for Morsie, Chris Dore and Stuntman Ronan? Is it, as I first believed, because they all live in a parallel universe? Knowing these three as I do, I can confirm that they do indeed live in Parallel Universes but this alone does not explain their lack of line twist.
So I’ve looked into this a bit deeper and I think the problem is not simply the circular movement of the tip, but what you do with your line hand. The problem is the twists slipping from in front of the line hand, to behind the line hand where they stay. On the other (fly side) of the line hand they just untwist again through casting.
So the next question is why do Lars, myself and others get twist here while others don’t? I believe it’s because we twisters release tension, whole slipping line, allowing the twist to pass to the reel side of the fingers. When I talked to Ronan he said he rarely slips line on the backcast. I almost always slip a little bit of line to cushion the boing. In fact the only time I don’t slip at this point is on the final backcast in distance competitions - when I really have to stop myself from doing it subconsciously.
—
Incidentally to remove line twist I find the easiest way is to shoot the line to the reel a few times, this helps puts the twist outside the tip ring where it can unravel.
Another little trick I have, is when spooling nylon - or flylines - is to do five turns right hand followed by five turns left hand and so on. Put twists in, put reverse twists in. I have been known to put entire flylines on spools this way - until I was taught to spin spools around a pencil/pen/screwdriver by Akos.
Cheers, Paul